Obama not ready for negotiations with Republicans until end of govt shutdown

US President Barack Obama speaks during a press conference in the Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, DC, on October 8, 2013 (AFP Photo/ / Jewel Samad )

President Barack Obama told reporters at the White House on Tuesday that he will discuss the future of his Affordable Care Act with Republican opponents in the House of Representatives only once Congress re-opens the United States government.

At the start of the second week of a widespread government
shutdown, Pres. Obama warned House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio)
during his Tuesday afternoon address that the White House won’t
negotiate the fate of the president’s hallmark “Obamacare”
legislation.

One week earlier, a stalemate in Congress was unable to be
resolved ahead of a Tuesday morning deadline required to pass a
spending bill that would have kept the government fully
functioning. Republican critics of Obamacare refused to authorize
any budget plan without ensuring the congressionally approved
health care act would be defunded.

Obama said Tuesday that he is happy to have a conversation or
negotiation with Republican leadership in the house, but such
a discussion “shouldn’t require hanging the threats of
government shutdown or economic chaos” over American people.

“Members of Congress, and the House Republicans in particular,
don’t get to demand ransom in exchange for doing their job,”
said Obama. That job, he added, requires those elected officials
to pass a budget

“No American president would deal with a foreign leader like
this. Most of you would not deal with coworkers or business
associates in this fashion, and we shouldn’t be dealing this way
here in Washington,” said the president.

Democrats are eager to reach a deal, added Obama, but said
lawmakers would not let talks occur “if the entire basis of
the Republican strategy is ‘We are going to shut down the
government or cause economic chaos if we don’t get 100 percent of
what we want.”

“Let’s lift these threats from our families and our
businesses, and let’s get down to work,” Obama added.
“Let’s stop the excuses, let’s take a vote in the House [and]
let’s end this shutdown right now.”

Should Republicans not allow the government to re-open, added
Obama, then the debt ceiling will not be raised and America may
effectively be driven to default.

A default, warned Obama, “would be dramatically worse”
than the government shutdown that started early last week.

“If Congress refuses to raise what’s called the debt ceiling,
America would not be able to meet all of our financial
obligations for the first time in 220 years,” he said.

Experts have previously predicted that an economic shutdown would
be “insane” and “catastrophic” for the nation, added Obama.

The president acknowledged that the phrase “debt ceiling”
may be too intimidating for lawmakers to tackle the issue at
hand, but insisted “this does not add a dime to our debt. It
simply says you pay for what Congress has . . . already
authorized America to purchase.”

“All it does is allow the Treasury Department to pay for what
Congress has already spent,” he said, noting that it’s been
done 45 times since the first term of President Ronald Reagan —
or around 1.4 times a year.

“I will work with anyone,” added Obama,
who explained that only such talks could occur once Republican
members of the House rescind their threats.

During a brief press conference Tuesday afternoon Boehner said he
was “disappointed” that the president refused to negotiate
with Republicans. The Speaker did not specifically mention the
healthcare law at the root of the shutdown, and said it was a
“disgrace” that military families are not receiving death
benefits when prompted by a reporter.

“The long and short of it is there is going to be a
negotiation here,” Boehner said. “The president said today
if there’s unconditional surrender by Republicans, he’ll sit down
and talk to us. That’s not the way our government works.”